Literature DB >> 32071489

A holographic waveguide based eye tracking device.

Changgeng Liu1, Beatrice Pazzucconi1, Juan Liu2, Lei Liu3, Xincheng Yao1,4.   

Abstract

We demonstrated the feasibility of using holographic waveguide for eye tracking. A custom-built holographic waveguide, a 20 mm × 60 mm × 3 mm flat glass substrate with integrated in- and out-couplers, was used for the prototype development. The in- and out-couplers, photopolymer films with holographic fringes, induced total internal reflection in the glass substrate. Diffractive optical elements were integrated into the in-coupler to serve as an optical collimator. The waveguide captured images of the anterior segment of the eye right in front of it and guided the images to a processing unit distant from the eye. The vector connecting the pupil center (PC) and the corneal reflex (CR) of the eye was used to compute eye position in the socket. A 3D printed model eye, which has a similar corneal curvature of human eye and laser pointer tube holder at the tail for simulation of eye gaze on a screen, was used for prototype validation. The benchtop prototype demonstrated a linear relationship between the angular eye position and the PC/CR vector over a range of 60 horizontal degrees and 40 vertical degrees. This prototype eye tracker has a tracking accuracy of 0.72 degree and tracking precision of 0.50 degree over the whole tracking range. These results confirmed that the holographic waveguide technology could be a feasible platform for developing a wearable eye tracker. Further development can lead to a compact, see-through eye tracker, which allows continuous monitoring of eye movement during real life tasks, and thus benefits diagnosis of oculomotor disorders.

Entities:  

Keywords:  eye tracker; holographic waveguide; model eye; oculomotor disorder

Year:  2019        PMID: 32071489      PMCID: PMC7028305          DOI: 10.1080/09500340.2019.1616842

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mod Opt        ISSN: 0950-0340            Impact factor:   1.464


  1 in total

1.  Holographic waveguide based optometer for the quantitative monitoring of ocular refractive error.

Authors:  Taeyoon Son; Lei Liu; Devrim Toslak; Juan Liu; Xincheng Yao
Journal:  OSA Contin       Date:  2020-03-15
  1 in total

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